(3k to t has up in 1 food build- H and Kent in lent is bstion, 0f the of the ï¬bres in the wetter- rgans u ï¬nd happi. ’oronto. mn sleep 0 at ‘1 re date-5‘ 7‘ W‘ down . v.4 instead 0t S35. 00 $43.00 Prup oi m s ran Mar. termite: m) 508!- 30. Port ohm in 11 go T68. an! and food 1035 “lune who I0? THE CANADIAN BANK OF COMMERCE are SUPP CAPI’ 3‘ â€â€˜1 I f- E 3000,000 REST, $12,500,000 gndsayBranch, H. A. HOLMES Manager Cent "M'Untahed, one cent per Pound more than market Price will be paid. Spring flat: You Know the Wherecbouts of William Jenkins? WW Wanted ALEXA“)! B'A'ms 0F MONTREAL FARMERS’ BUSINESS .nolicd tree sgwrdays 10 to 1 o’clock. Hem If corporated by A“ of parliament SIR F Ofï¬ce Hours : Town: an \I: WALKER, C.V.O.. LLD†D.C.L., President 1 22m, JOHN AlRD . ..v.. Mar-Kg" Assistant General Manna. 1:); Branch «hum-had AD. 1858 Am n. an} Prn'ince 0" me Do- -,.-\elyim;01taut city the Donna- \. whmmlIand Lcudon,England, New Rank 0f Commerce extends to Farmers every timcfion of their banking business, including wllcction of sales notes. Blank sales notes ,. -I charge on application. a, human € ta you to LL w . Presi- Onge and Summer C(‘ntral SchOol, School. courses wriptiun of Bankmg nusmosa savings Unpartl'uwu. at. aviary ï¬ts of 1! Hells read L‘ it tgt‘d Bel be Perth. Hut, March ISLâ€"With one poll tn hear from, John C. Ebbs, (‘unservativa had a. majority .of 607 owr David McLean, Liberal, in the cmxtvst for the vacanCy in the Lesgi- latux‘e caused by the death of Hon. so. Others have applied from Princeton, New York. Mr. w. J. Rayner was appointed missionery for Lindsay preshytery. Conservative in and there are about ï¬fty men with splendid qualiï¬cations who haV’e dOne l’iH'DSB‘LW‘iCILY MISSIONARII‘IS (:rmt sattisfuCtion was expressed )(‘SH‘I‘liaLV at the meeting of the Pros- h_\ts-rian Home Mission Board at. the int-go number of students applying for mission \\ ork throughout the do- minion. These stutlvnts come from as far afield as Glasgow, Edinburgh. Almrdevn and Dublin of the old land. 'I‘he- number applying for work is greatest in the history of the church in t‘anadu. This is the ï¬rst time that students from the old land have applied for work in the dominion. (‘01. Matheson, who represented South Lanark for many years. EEHER HEGLEGT A HEAMOHE. UIECUflc qu naué nu vuv uJ---._- To get rid of the headache, and-thus prevent more serious troubles, 1t 18 absolutely necessary to cleanse the system of all waste and poisonous matter, and keep the bowels well open, the clogging of the bowels being one of the rincip e causes of headache. Burdock lood Bitters regulates the bowels, and makes their movement free am} .natul‘nl. -L Headache is not a disease in itself, but is often a source of great suffering, and its presence is likely symptomatic of some disease lurkipg jn _the_ sys‘ten‘l. -- .1 51.“- ziiédi'eyfor headache; m where 9thers fail: flier-“Several years ago 1: sufferer from headach . run down, arid r3311? mac: to do no good. 0 3100‘ 13mg and decided to give it â€rm. Tho result 3:1 marveéloï¬fge maul; stopped en 3, an bet†. many. I can safely M . ycturod only by The '1“ m o... ted. Toronto. Ont. OH 1 B D Ireland Snowy Glen, Ballynuro, Co. Antrim H. B. Black, $32.802,000 Manager Lindsay Branch Egan“. Hale}, South Lanark Eunbflshod A. D. 1 817 SEEâ€"cine that . Cobourg temperance won-horsemen to camp-Jen this year for logo)? op- tion 9:4!01' negate reductipn. -~ job and giVes his tongue 3. rest. Never hit a. man when he’s got you Als-ike clm’or, .\'0. ,1, $12 bush. Apples, 50c to $1.10. Breakfast bacon. 23c. in piece, 24c. sliced. Beef, hind, $12 per cwt. Beef, front, $10 per cwt. Beef cattle), $4.50 to $6. Buttm‘, pvr II), 270. ‘0 28¢. Barley per bus. 40 to 50¢. Buckwheat, 45c bus. Bran, cwt, $1. Chickens per It). 18 to 20c. or THE LINDSAY MARKETS 'I‘EIHIH.â€"'J‘hree months on cattle, sixty days on horses, on approved notes on all sums over $20. $20 and under Cash. A discount at the rate of 7 pm' Cont. will he allowed for cash on credit amounts, W. .\. Fanning, proprietor; Geo. Jackson. auctiunwr. CONSIGNED. 1 gang plow, 1 cultivator. 1 Syl- vester mower, 1 sulky rake, 1 single plow, 1 sett, barrows. 'Three months credit. 20 pair canvas mitts for spring work. 6 dozen cans of Stewart Condition Powders. ness. 6 dozen rawhide whips, just from the factory. iFWING'SJIORSE â€(NAME 4O snrcingles, got to be sold. Clear- ing out stock. 5 set single harness, double and stitched, any price. 3 all-wool blankets, any price. Single harness, old. Sett of Secondâ€"hand double har- 1 black gelding, 7 years old. ser- viceable, sound, weight about 1400 pounds. 53 full-lined horse blankets. 72 in- ches long, any price. Red clover, $10 bush. Rod cloVer, $5 to $9. Straw. $4.00 to $5.00. Sirloin steak 20c lb. Spare ribs 10c Ib. Sage per bunch 5c. Timothy seed. $1.50 to $9 bush. 1 brown gelding, 9 years old, sound and true, all harness. 1 chestnut mare, road class, guar- anteed against autos. 1 pair colts, by Keswick, rising 3 years old. 15 horses, workers and drivers, on credit. 1 chestnut horse, rising 5, weight 1400 and sonnd. Oats. rolled. 32-23} per cwt. Pork, hind. 15°- Pork, front. 146. PeaS, large, $1.50 buï¬h. Peas. small. $1.25 bush. Potatoes 90c to $1 per bag. Rib roast 17c Ib. Rye 55c. bus. Cream 15 to 30¢. Cheese 18c lb. Celery 5c bunch. Ducks, 18c. 1b. Eggs. per dozen, 19c. to 20¢. Lour, Manitoba, 82.86. Geese, per lb. 17 to 18¢. Hogs, liVe, $9.00 to $9.50. Honey. 15c. lb. Hens, 50¢ each, 19.c It). Buy, baled. 76c. cm. Hides, cow, SC. to 9c. Hides, calf. 10c. to 12¢. Hides, sheep, $1.00 to $1.25. Hay, $9 to $11 per ton. Lamb, 25c. lb. Wood, maple. 37-50. Oat dust $1 per cwt. Cows. 30 cows, guaranteed in ca", sound in udden 1 Yorkshire (white) sow. in pig- and due May 10, weight about. 250 pounds. 1 bay gelding, ï¬rst-class worker, 1300. 80 head of cattle, all classes, good Condition. 10 high'Igrade Holsteins, rising two years. Turnips, $4.15 per ton. Wheat fall, 950. What. goose, 80c. bush. 30 cows, all under 7 years, in good condition. 30 cows, to be sold on credit, your own price. 40 Steers, heifer and dry coWS, 1'07 grass purposes. A wise man puts his ears on Sale Saturday. March 29,1915 choice Holstein and Ayrshire THE WATOHMAN-WARDEB. LINDSAY. ONTARIO. The John (‘arew Lumber (‘umpany camps closed down last \xeck for the season, which was a very successful one, despite the unsatisfactory and backward weather conditions of the early part. of the winter. ï¬esident Bonilla, of the Republic of Honduras, is dead. WHY ENDURE PIM PLES CUTICURA' Soap and Ointment CAMPS CLOSED. Do so muchgfp‘r; imples, blackheads,’me -rough hands,.and‘ dfy',‘ thin and falling hair, and post so little that it .is almost criminal not to use them. ing. 0:: Protnd- lug Piles. No surgical UpOj- ntion rcquirca. Dr. Chase's Ointment. and .vlievc you at once and as certainly cure ~32 60¢. a box; all dealers. or Edmanson. Iiump 1‘: Cu" Limited. Toronto. Sample be: (me it you mention Lh‘l boner 'tnd encimao 2c. htuum I» May ph‘lage. stow l A 1913 edition has just been pub- lished by the passenger department of the Grand Trunk Railway System of its attractive booklet. " 'h'ains Three and Four." These are the leompany's two fastest express trains {operating through a Country ï¬lled ‘with interest for the tourist, the l sportsman and the traveler. One of them, " The International Limited," iis the fastest and ï¬nest train in Ca- nada. The route of these t\vo trains is between Chicago and New York \‘ia Niagara Falls and Portland, via Toronto and Montreal. No. 3, west~ bound and No. 4 eastbound. The booklet which, as usual with Grand T'runk publications, is elaborately illustrated, gives a complete de- scription of the trains and all the varied features of interest along; the route of 969 miles to New York, or 1,140 miles to Portland. Full in- formation is also given of the var- ious ConneCting trains so that the whole forms a valuable compendium of information for the intending tru- teller. The latest high cost is lhv high ('04. of baseball players. The nuxt will he the high cost, of has-mil turku's. (I .T.R. BOOKLET \ single cat dreads an open-facr-d It is soothingâ€"ends pain quickly. It heals every time. Just as good {or grown- Experienced mothers say Zun-Bnk is but for chil- dren's injuries and skin troubles, because: - up§. It is antisepticâ€"prevents cuts and burns taking the wrong way. It is herbalâ€"no ‘poiSonous mineral coloring. . Sold at all stores and another da with Itching; loot}- 57:3th aniï¬iï¬ A cahlegram was received Sunday from the LindSay " around the world trippers." announCing the fact that they had reached Liverpool in safety. The passage over was a very rough. one, but nevertheless much enjoyed and all are well. The cablegram was sent by Messrs. A. L. Campbell and D. Cinnamon. mine this treut. †('Oall ()il Johnny " in l’tnlli}'l- \‘uniat and it was after this he com- imvnced In ï¬gure his “with in the Imillions. I Andrew Farm-gin, the third richest mun, was born in lmniermline, Scul- lund, and was 12 years of age when he came to the l'nited States. His parents located in Allegheny, l’vnn. Here ~young Carnegie secured a posi- tion as a, hohbin boy in a cotton [factory at. 65 Cents per week; being a bright boy he did not remain in that position very long, but went running an engine in a small mill, where he remained for two years. As the pay was small Andrew then Went to l’ittsburg, where he entered a telegraph ofï¬ce as messenger boy at a wage of $1.25 per week. Carâ€" ;negio was always on the job and ‘nexer watched the clock to see how fast the hands went round, and in due time he reCeived a clerkship. During the civil war in the United States Andrew held an important position in the army telegraph ser-T vice. After the war he returned to‘ the service of the Pennsylvania (fum- pany, where he received promotion. Mr. Carnegie saw that the day was rapidly coming when iron would supersede wooden-built bridges, and Irom that time came an entire change in his business career. To-day the little bobbin boy, who worked {or 65 cents per week can boast of be- ing the third richest man in the U'l CONCERT AT OAKWOOD. A high-class entertainment will be given in Oukwood on March 31, un- der the auspices of the Public Lib- rary. by the {anions Southland Sere- n-Mrfl. This i! one 0! the but traveling organization on the road and they will provide an octet-uln- meat of mirth and melody. Do not on a raft and steered it down the Ohio rim-r to a mill where such tim- ber was in good dmnand. “is cash did not count up until he got in with John ll. Rockefeller, the second of the billionaires, was horn in the State of New York, where he hoed potatoes and plucked weeds until ten years of age. He thr-n struck out. for himself aml Worked for neighboring farmers until he was 16, when he hiked away to Cleveland, Ohio, get- ting a position as (mice buy. 119 saved money at. a small wage, less than $30 per month and made his ï¬rst. good deal when he bought a cargo of hoop poles, which he loaded Now most 01 "3‘ have some idea about old lather Adum and the time when he lived upon earth. For the beneï¬t of the reader who may n‘i't be inclined to squander time ï¬guring back to the' day when he eat his ï¬rst apple in the garden it can be authentically stated that it is 5.913 years. Had he started a. savings ac- count in a bank at that time, and that his weekly deposit amounted to $3.25, not counting interest‘on the deposit, this saving 'would amount [to $1,0005,210 at the present day. Here is how the three richest men in the United States started. : Frederick “'eyhaeuswr, said to lie the richest man in the world and a German by birth, started life in a saw mill in Rock Island, “L, and later on he purchased the mill. He afterwards purchased large tracts of timber in \l'isumsin and without g0- ing into ilelalils he is now the leader of all hilliunairm on this mundane orl). It is stated by sociologists that had Emperor Augustus, whose rule was marked by- thatvimportant eVent known as the birth of-Christ, saved 8250.000 each year out of his weekly pay checl he would not hold the monetary standing of the old Laird of Skibo, Andrew Carnegie. After reflecting on what a collemion of a cold million of-dollars mean and the period of time which would elapse before the ordinary individual pas- sessing a paying business could ac- cumulate this amount is almost be- yond Conception. Don’t throw down the shovel and the hoe and get dincouragvd. hut grit your teeth and still keep digging 0n and some day you may vauire it. Here is how the three richest men How lung would it take u man to accumulate one million of dollars and to live under ordinary clréumutances? Story of Three Richest Men in United States HOW TO BECOME A MILLIONAIRE on, Dunsford, Hartley, Valentin and Lindsay. A series of spa-i8! Farmers' Insti- tute meetings were held 1n Victoria County last week. The speakers were the district representatives of the Department of Agriculture for Petorboroy Victoria and Ontario Counties, namely, Mr. E. S. Hap- kins, 0! Norwood; Mr. A. A. Knight of Lindsay; and Mr. E. T. Hagarth, of Whitby. The subjects discussed were : Feeding dairy cattle, drainage, crop improvement, alfalfa and poul- try. Meetings were held at Camer- THE Series of Special Meetings For farmers A man, razor in hand, was caught by his wife assassinating not an on- emy, but a cornâ€"what he needed was Putnam‘s (,‘orn Extractor; it’s safe, painless and sure. 'l‘vy “Putnam's" -â€"curcs so fast, 25c. at. all dealers. The Kind You Have Always 3mg? GENUINE CASTORIA ALWAYS Low prices, I have no middlemen‘s commission to JOHN DENNIS $35,123:: :‘éaitzï¬zi’: PUMP MAKER RUSSELL-ST. LINDSAY our. NEXT T0 02mm Guilty of 3ssassination. OI" GMA atâ€) â€P10: Custom is a. harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paro- goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. it is Pleasant. It; contains neither Oplum, Mot-{dune nor other satanic substance. its age is its guarantee. lt destroys \Voms and allzxys l-‘cvcrlshness. It cures Diarrhoea. and “find Colic. lt relieves Teething Troubles, cures Constipation and I‘latulrncy. It wsainï¬lau-ï¬ the Food, regulates the Stomach and Bowds, giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Faunaâ€"The Mother’s" chnd. LINDSAY BRANCH What is CASTORIA Chlldron Cry for Fletcher's WC Ctmluï¬ COâ€?! I7. 17 .UILAV STREET In Use For Over 30 Years ï¬ndtbescrviouofdï¬sbukd RI\'ERS.â€"In Lindsay, Thin-day, March 20th, 1913, to Mr. and Km- M. J. Rivers, Rusaell-st., a um. KIXXICY-MCMAHOX.â€"â€"Mr. and m J. J. McMahon announce the nu» riage of their daughte-r, KAI-y Loraine, to Mr. Albert A. Kinney, on Friday, March 2lst, 1913, 3? Lindsay, Ontario. Pumps, Wind Mills Gasoline Engines “KW YORK cm. l873 MARRI AGE- PA“. “I“ L‘?